Sentences with phrase «whose picture he found»

Logan Thibault returns home from Iraq committed to locating an American woman whose picture he found there.

Not exact matches

«10 His findings are in line with those of Richard Pfeffer, whose book, Working for Capitati $ m, paints a bleak picture indeed.
Founded in 1978 by Bob Moore (the man whose picture is on every package!)
The team found that the more a person sweated in reaction to the pictures, the more likely they were to actively participate in politics — with those whose perspiration increased the most around twice as likely to participate in political action as those who perspired the least.
Liv Bode, a virologist at the Robert Koch Institut in Berlin whose team was the first to isolate the virus from patients, welcomes the findings as a «solid piece of work that fits the picture and lends further support to the existence of human [strains of] BDV.»
One way to know a person has lied about their height is if they post a picture next to a celebrity, whose height you can typically find on a Google search.
Delivering a wonderfully restrained but equally commanding performance of a man struggling to find the strength to cope, Teller is the true star of the picture, while the chemistry shared with Koale, whose bond serves as the heart of the story, is equally touching.
Look deep into the movie listings this January, past the big name awards fodder, the PT Andersons and the Rob Marshalls, the biopics and social problem films, and you'll find, in limited release, the latest picture from one of the most influential and important directors of the past 40 years, Tsui Hark, whose name remains so unknown in the US he's as likely to be identified by his personal name as his family name (for the record: he is Mr. Tsui, not Mr. Hark; pronounced «Choy — Hok»).
Universal Pictures and Working Title have released the first poster for The Snowman, the upcoming big screen adaptation of Jo Nesbo's crime novel, which stars Michael Fassbender as Detective Harry Hole as he investigates the disappearance of a woman whose scarf is found wrapped around an ominous - looking snowman.
The sturdy froth of color and texture that comprises his images creates a «glancing, immaterial quality,» an impression not of the world as it is, but as it is remembered.1 While the artist finds that «the subject matter of (his) pictures is often established in one sitting,» he may take up to three years to complete a painting, even one as profoundly simple as After Corot (1979 - 1982).2 Hodgkin's process of recollection is related to that of the master mnemonist, Marcel Proust, whose all - over attention did not discriminate between the most significant details of memory and the most obscure.
Faigin writes that Bakker «cobbl [es] together highly original pictures from a huge array of sources, whose only common element is that the artist finds them worthy.
In the programme, Palin, fascinated by Hammershøi, whose pictures he conceived as having a distinct enigmatic coolness and distance about them, sets out to unlock the mysteries and find out about the background of Hammershøi.
Maychack has found his own way to this sort of provocation, echoing Duchamp (1887 - 1968) less than 1960s makers of the «shaped canvas,» such as Frank Stella, whose paintings» eccentric geometry made the arbitrariness of pictures» rectangularity clearly felt.
During this unfolding of time and expectations, whose final picture is never accurate, Hylden finds crevices, glitches, and orders of technique that eventually, if taken hold, inform his next move, his next exhibition.
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